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On Aphelenchoides hodsoni Goodey, attacking narcissus

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 November 2009

W. E. H. Hodson
Affiliation:
The University, Reading
G. W. Gibson
Affiliation:
Isles of Scilly Experimental Station

Extract

For many years it has been recognised that the nematode, Anguillulina dipsaci, is a major pest of narcissus, and growers and scientific workers alike are familiar with the presence of damaged and discoloured tissues within the bulbs, accompanied by swelling and distortion of the foliage, which are, prior to the death of the bulb, associated with attack by this pest. Certain other nematodes are sometimes responsible for somewhat similar injury to the bulbs, and in 1932 Steiner & Buhrer published a short account of those nematodes which have, on occasion, been found within and apparently been responsible for the diseased condition of narcissus bulbs in U.S.A.

Type
Research Papers
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1936

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References

Goodey, T., 1935.—“Aphelenchoides hodsoni, n. sp., a nematode affecting Narcissus bulbs and leaves.J. Helminth., XIII (3), 167172. (W.L. 11224B.)CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hodson, W. E. H., 1931.—“The Stem & Bulb Eelworm, Tylenchis dipsaci, (Kühn) Bastian. A further contribution to our knowledge of the biologic Strains of the Nematode.Ann. appl. Biol., XVIII (I), 8397. (W.L. 1025.)CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Steiner, G. & Buhrer, E. M., 1932.—“The Nonspecificity of the Brown-Ring Symptoms in Narcissus attacked by Nematodes.Phytopathology, XXII (II), 927928. (W.L. 16273.)Google Scholar